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Domaine Guiberteau

It’s All Happening—New Releases from one of France’s Most Thrilling Addresses…
Domaine Guiberteau

The great domaines never stand still, and Domaine Guiberteau has more than a few exciting changes to consider here. Romain’s Domaine is now 20 hectares and employs 18 people full-time. These are serious, top-shelf Burgundy-domaine kind of numbers. From vintage ’24, however, he has decided to reduce his holdings to 16 hectares, with the remaining four transferred to a new négociant project he and his team have set up.

The Moulin cuvé
es will join his Chai de la Dive project, with a portion of fruit supplemented by good organic growers. Romain wants the négociant wines to produce delicious, early-drinking styles at fair prices. The price for these wines will, happily, go down. That’s not something you hear often in today’s market! Less so from a leading domaine.


Starting with vintage 2024, Romain will use the Domaine Guiberteau label purely for the top Estate wines, beginning with the “Domaine” bottling, which will be aged longer before release. There is also a new building for the long-term storage of Domaine wines, allowing for longer aging and a museum library. This longer maturation has already begun, with the wines aging a year longer before release. That Guiberteau’s notably helical, pent-up wines will be more approachable on release gives cause to celebrate.


In other news, Romain’s daughter, Camille, has joined the Domaine with partner Alex Crochet—a qualified oenologist—significantly bolstering the team in the cellar. They are now working with some sexy oak foudres from Rousseau in Gevrey-Chambertin. In the vineyards, François Dal, France’s leading ‘vine surgeon’ and an authority on Poussard pruning, is now a consultant. Guiberteau has a great collection of old vines, and the conversion to Poussard proves that he means to keep them as healthy as possible for as long as possible.


The quality of Guiberteau’s new releases indicates the progression running through the heart of the Domaine. The whites are typically full throttle, yet complex and vibrant. There’s a case that some of the warmer years are not as jagged as when Paul Wasserman penned his Chenin’s “of punk rock violence” quote, but we are still in thrilling overdrive territory. The reds, meanwhile, continue their arc of refinement. Romain’s path is to temper the wildness of his intense, limestone-grown fruit with a patina of refinement and relative accessibility. On current evidence, he is exceeding expectations.

The Wines

Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Blanc 2023

Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Blanc 2023

This is 100% Chenin Blanc, grown on the calcareous soils in and around Brézé. More precisely, it comes from younger vines in Clos de Guichaux and Clos des Carmes, as well as some old vines from the Bas de Pentes terroir of Brézé. Then, there is a splash of Les Chapaudaises from Bizay. As any Saumurois will tell you, these terroirs are some of the crown jewels (particularly Clos des Carmes, which sits on the chalky mother rock of the Brézé hill, just below the Château de Brézé). The plantings range from 1935 to 2012, so this wine has plenty of old-vine stuffing. With all this in mind, perhaps the quality shouldn’t come as a surprise.

Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Blanc 2023
Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Blanc Le Bourg 2022

Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Blanc Le Bourg 2022

This is Romain Guiberteau’s second release from the celebrated Brézé terroir of Le Bourg. Despite the name, this vineyard bears no relation to the Le Bourg in Chacé of Clos Rougeard fame. Guiberteau’s single hectare of vines (pictured below) sits below Clos des Carmes, sloping towards the village with sandy-clay soil over a soft, tuffeau limestone bedrock. The vines were planted in the 1940s, and the old-vine density from these gnarly old dames—matched with the site’s pungent minerality—creates a wine of significant intensity matched by deep-set tension. Romain jokes that one of the main challenges here is children from the neighbouring school kicking their football into the vineyard! Each year, the children are allowed to pick some grapes to make jam, too! Only in France.

Pressed as bunches and naturally fermented, Le Bourg ages for 12 months in used barrels before bottling. It’s a wine of menacing nerve, with more slate-like minerality than Guiberteau’s other Brézé cuvées. 


“A cuvée parcellaire here, Le Bourg being a single vineyard in Brézé. The élevage here made use exclusively of old barrels, and lasted one year. A nicely focused nose to this, rather tense and deliciously assertive, suggesting citric orange and bitter lemon peel, with a matchsticky reduction which works well in this context. A rather charming palate follows, fresh with lightly gripped substance, plenty of charming citrus and peach notes, with a fresh acid profile. An admirable style, retaining a good grip in the finish too. Long, fresh, and a success for the vintage. This has good potential. The alcohol on the label is 12.5%.”
93 points, Chris Kissack, The Wine Doctor
Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Blanc Le Bourg 2022
Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Brézé Blanc 2021

Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Brézé Blanc 2021

100% Chenin Blanc. The modern renaissance of Chenin de Brézé (as it was once known) owes a great deal to the Foucault brothers’ Brézé bottling and, more recently, to a new generation of growers like Guiberteau. This striking wine comes from two small parcels of mature vines (planted in 1933 and 1952) within the fabled Brézé climat, a terroir that once produced wines as revered as those of the greatest vineyards of Burgundy and Bordeaux. The lion’s share of the fruit comes from an important lieu-dit called Bourguenne, while one-quarter of the fruit is also drawn from the historic Clos de Carmes terroir.

Guiberteau now uses larger-format barrels from different coopers. He prefers Atelier Centre France’s thick-staved demi-muids for this wine, and he’s also engaged Clos Rougeard’s local artisan cooper Dussiaux, whose barrels bring smoky/cedary complexity to this wine in its youth. Furthermore, Brézé now spends two years in barrel (50% new) and six months in tank, recognising its potency and coiled energy.

Year in and year out, this reminds us of the force of this incredible terroir. This place can simultaneously deliver the texture and savoury reduction of great white Burgundy and the raciness of great German Riesling. If the Clos de Guichaux calls to mind excellent Chablis, the Brézé style leans towards the textural richness of fine Meursault (at a fraction of the price).

“This white blend comes from three distinct parcels in Brézé, the wine aged in oak using 50% new and 50% older barrels, the élevage lasting close to two years. The lengthy contact with new wood does come through on the nose at the moment, as it is certainly influenced by oak, the seams of fruit melded with liquorice, fennel and smoke, along with a light reductive note. The palate is the same, melding this with a delicately lithe texture, spiced with the oaky notes from the nose, with a bitter grip in the finish. Good potential here but it needs time, five years at least, to absorb that oak. The alcohol on the label is 13%”
93 points, Chris Kissack, The Wine Doctor
Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Brézé Blanc 2021
Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Brézé Blanc 2020 (1500ml)

Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Brézé Blanc 2020 (1500ml)

100% Chenin Blanc. The modern renaissance of Chenin de Brézé (as it was once known) owes a great deal to the Foucault brothers’ Brézé bottling and, more recently, to a new generation of growers like Guiberteau. This striking wine comes from two small parcels of mature vines (planted in 1933 and 1952) within the fabled Brézé climat, a terroir that once produced wines as revered as those of the greatest vineyards of Burgundy and Bordeaux. The lion’s share of the fruit comes from an important lieu-dit called Bourguenne, while one-quarter of the fruit is also drawn from the historic Clos de Carmes terroir.

Guiberteau now uses larger-format barrels from different coopers. He prefers Atelier Centre France’s thick-staved demi-muids for this wine, and he’s also engaged Clos Rougeard’s local artisan cooper Dussiaux, whose barrels bring smoky/cedary complexity to this wine in its youth. Furthermore, Brézé now spends two years in barrel (50% new) and six months in tank, recognising its potency and coiled energy.

Year in and year out, this reminds us of the force of this incredible terroir. This place can simultaneously deliver the texture and savoury reduction of great white Burgundy and the raciness of great German Riesling. If the Clos de Guichaux calls to mind excellent Chablis, the Brézé style leans towards the textural richness of fine Meursault (at a fraction of the price). From a powerful year, 2020 is still a babe in arms, bristling with dry extract, smoky reductive notes, nutty complexity and vinous intensity. The distinction of the Brézé terroir shines through in the wine’s supercharged minerality; full of chalky intensity, salinity and tension, it is reminiscent of the historic Coche-Dury style of white and unbelievably impressive and seductive.

“Lemon oil, crushed mint, white flowers and hazelnuts introduce Guiberteau’s 2020 Brézé, a medium to full-bodied, satiny and rich white that’s broad and enveloping with a fleshy core of fruit. Long, ethereal and mineral, the finish is underlined by delicate notes of spices and caramel. Crafted from vines planted on three different plots, it matured for two years in half new/half used barrels.”
93 points, Yohan Castaing, The Wine Advocate
Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Brézé Blanc 2020 (1500ml)
Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Clos des Carmes Blanc 2020

Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Clos des Carmes Blanc 2020

The Brézé hill is home to at least nine historic and clearly delimited clos (or enclosed single climats), most still owned by the Château de Brézé. Three of these were singled out in the last century for their outstanding quality by Maurice Edmond Sailland (author of the Très Grands Vins de Saumur and better known by his pen name, Curnonsky). The Guiberteau clan own one of these three, the monopole of Clos des Carmes, acquired by Romain’s grandfather in 1955. That’s some good buying right there! It’s a south-facing vineyard that sits mid-slope on the belly of the hill and covers some 2.6 hectares. The entire parcel was replanted with mass-selection cuttings by Robert Guiberteau (Romain’s father) in 2004.

Only 0.8 hectares of the vineyard (producing 30 hl/ha) are used for the Clos de Carmes bottling, with the remainder declassified (for now) into the Saumur Blanc and Brézé bottlings. The maturation is the same as for the latter cuvée: whole-cluster pressing, indigenous yeast fermentation in barrel (new, one- and two-year-old oak) and 24 months’ aging on fine lees in cask. Despite the similar upbringing, this wine is typically more tightly wound than Guiberteau’s classic Brézé bottling. For this reason, the cuvée rests for a further year in the bottle before release.

That extra year means a lot. There is marked strength, yet the significant structure and ample dry extract tightly bind together every molecule of the wine. As Rajat Parr points out, Clos des Carmes is Guiberteau’s “standout white”—yet, veering deep into Burgundian territory, the wine’s saturating intensity and energetic force also make it the domaine’s most brooding.

Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Clos des Carmes Blanc 2020
Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Les Moulins Rouge 2023

Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Les Moulins Rouge 2023

100% Cabernet Franc. As with the Moulins Blanc, this label was initially created to provide a home for Guiberteau’s organic-in-conversion grapes. The vines are primarily located in Montreuil-Bellay and include a healthy portion of old-vine fruit from a recently acquired parcel on the Brézé hill. The vines vary in age from 10 to 80 years. The wine was raised in stainless steel, with just five days on skins. The idea is to offer a more open, delicious, early-drinking wine at a more accessible price than the village bottling—and it works. Expect a racy, crunchy wine with loads of juicy red cherry, ground anise, ink and nettle aromas and flavours and a long, smoky finish. Despite its drinkability, it has more depth than you might expect at this price point, and it drinks like a wine that may, surprisingly, age quite well. It’s terrific value and a terrific entrée into the reds of the Domaine. 

Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Les Moulins Rouge 2023
Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Les Moulins Rouge 2023 (1500ml)

Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Les Moulins Rouge 2023 (1500ml)

100% Cabernet Franc. As with the Moulins Blanc, this label was initially created to provide a home for Guiberteau’s organic-in-conversion grapes. The vines are primarily located in Montreuil-Bellay and include a healthy portion of old-vine fruit from a recently acquired parcel on the Brézé hill. The vines vary in age from 10 to 80 years. The wine was raised in stainless steel, with just five days on skins. The idea is to offer a more open, delicious, early-drinking wine at a more accessible price than the village bottling—and it works. Expect a racy, crunchy wine with loads of juicy red cherry, ground anise, ink and nettle aromas and flavours and a long, smoky finish. Despite its drinkability, it has more depth than you might expect at this price point, and it drinks like a wine that may, surprisingly, age quite well. It’s terrific value and a terrific entrée into the reds of the Domaine. 

Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Les Moulins Rouge 2023 (1500ml)
Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Rouge 2022

Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Rouge 2022

100% Cabernet Franc. Guiberteau’s village rouge is sourced from three parcels of old-vine Cabernet Franc (planted from 1955 to 1957) on silty/sandy topsoils over limestone on the Brézé hill. Made entirely from destemmed grapes, this fruit-forward bottling fermented naturally in concrete before spending 12 months in large tronçonique barrels. This reverses the logic in the white releases, where Les Moulins is elevated above village level. Romain Guiberteau clearly thought the same, hence the pricing.

To mitigate the power of the vintage, Guiberteau avoided any punch-downs or pump-overs, only infusing the grapes in their own juice this year. The result of this approach in a seductive year is a wonderfully juicy yet layered red that is already accessible and delicious, with a core of pulpy, dark cherry fruit and subtle, roasted herb and peppercorn-like spice.

Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Rouge 2022
Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Les Arboises Rouge 2021

Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Les Arboises Rouge 2021

100% Cabernet Franc. Les Arboises is a subsection of the limestone-dominant Brézé hill. This is Guiberteau’s top red from a renowned red terroir. The monopole parcel was planted in 1957 on a rocky, chalky site and produces super-graceful, mineral expressions of Saumur. The fruit is fully destemmed and naturally fermented in concrete before resting for 18 months in new, one-, two- and three-year-old barrels. Guiberteau used about 40% new barrels in 2020. He ages this cuvée for longer than his other reds—both in barrel and bottle—feeling this site’s more angular tannins require extra refinement.

In contrast to Les Chapaudaises, it offers not only the density of the vintage but also more barrel spice and chiselled length. It is complex, assertive, and tightly coiled—a wine that begs for air, a big glass and a hearty, meaty food match. It’s impressive now (especially after a 30-minute decant) but will be brilliant with another five to 10 years in the cellar.

Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Les Arboises Rouge 2021

The white wines are pure, limpid, minerally and bracing, softening with time, but always showing a delicate Chenin ripeness, not the questionable sour-fruit some domaines offer, and not the wood-tarted version available at some addresses. The reds are cool, fresh and classically Saumur in all they possess...” Chris Kissack, TheWineDoctor.com

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